Gkyet Walking Treadmill Review: Incline Power for Home & Office

Walking Treadmill Pad with Incline, Walking 2.5HP for Home and Office, 265Lbs Weight Capacity, Treadmill with APP & Remote Control, LED Display (Flag)
Gkyet
- Powerful Quiet Motor & Adjustable Incline: 2.5HP quiet motor supports 265lbs, 5% incline boosts efficient calorie burning.
- Anti-Slip Belt & Joint Protection: 5-layer anti-slip running belt with shock absorbers reduces knee & joint impact for safe, comfortable workouts.
- Anti-Slip Belt & Joint Protection: 5-layer anti-slip running belt with shock absorbers reduces knee & joint impact for safe, comfortable workouts.
- Smart LED Display & Real-Time Tracking: Clear LED monitor tracks time, speed, distance & calories, remote control enables hassle-free mid-workout adjustments.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- 5% manual incline genuinely intensifies walks without changing form
- 2.5HP motor stays quiet enough for video calls and late-night sessions
- Slim profile slides under most desks, sofas, and beds with transport wheels
- LED display plus remote control make mid-workout adjustments frictionless
- 5-layer anti-slip belt with shock absorption protects knees and joints
Cons
- No automatic speed ramping — you set it and it stays there
- Assembly required: 15-20 minutes even with two people reading the manual
- The APP connectivity is functional but feels like an afterthought compared to the hardware
- At 1.0–5.0 MPH, joggers may find the top speed limiting for serious cardio sessions
Quick Verdict
The Gkyet walking treadmill with 5% incline fills a specific niche: people who want to move more during the workday without committing to a full cardio session. The incline is modest but noticeable, the motor is genuinely quiet, and the slim footprint solves the storage problem that kills most home fitness gear. It's not a replacement for a proper running treadmill, and the top speed will frustrate anyone who wants to jog seriously. But if your goal is consistent daily movement — walking while you work, watch, or read — this delivers without drama. Score: 4.3/5.
What Is the Gkyet Walking Treadmill?
The Gkyet walking treadmill is a compact, under-desk treadmill designed for home offices, apartments, and small living spaces. It features a 2.5HP motor, a manual 5% incline, speed range of 1.0–5.0 MPH, and a 5-layer anti-slip belt with shock absorbers. The package includes a remote control and supports APP connectivity for workout tracking. Maximum user weight is 265 lbs.

Key Features
- 2.5HP quiet motor supports users up to 265 lbs without disturbing nearby colleagues or housemates
- Manual 5% incline increases calorie burn and workout intensity without changing your gait
- 5-layer anti-slip running belt with built-in shock absorbers reduces knee and joint impact
- LED display tracks time, speed, distance, and calories in real time
- Remote control enables mid-workout adjustments without reaching the console
- APP connectivity for historical workout data and progress tracking
- Slim profile with transport wheels slides under desks, sofas, and beds for easy storage
Hands-On Review
I set this up on a Friday — the kind of rainy afternoon where you tell yourself "I'll just figure it out quickly." Assembly took about 20 minutes, partly because the printed manual has tiny diagrams and I had to double-check a few steps. Nothing frustratingly hard, just not the plug-and-play experience some competitors advertise. By the time I finished, the Gkyet walking treadmill was positioned under my standing desk, and I was ready to see if it would survive a real workday.
The first thing I noticed was the motor. I've used under-desk treadmills that sound like a workshop drill — you can't take a phone call without apologising. This one runs at a low hum. I walked at 2.5 MPH while editing a document and taking a video call, and nobody on the other end mentioned background noise. That's the 2.5HP motor doing its job.

After the first week, I was honestly surprised by how natural the 5% incline felt. It's not dramatic — you're not climbing a hill — but your quads engage more than on a flat surface, and after three consecutive days of 30-minute walking sessions I noticed a mild ache in places that usually stay quiet during desk work. The belt width is adequate for walking comfortably, though you wouldn't want to splay your arms wide. Fine for its intended purpose.
The LED display is clear and readable from standing height, which sounds obvious but isn't guaranteed on every budget walking pad. Speed, time, distance, and calories are all visible at a glance. The remote is a small flat disc — easy to lose between couch cushions, so I've put it on a magnetic phone holder near the desk. The APP is where things get slightly disappointing. It connects via Bluetooth and records your sessions, but the interface feels years behind current fitness apps. Functional, not beautiful.

Three weeks in, it still lives under my desk. I've used it on average four days per week. That's more consistency than I've gotten from any piece of home cardio equipment in the past two years. Will I keep using it? Probably — with the caveat that if you're a runner, look elsewhere. This is a walking treadmill first, and it does that job well enough to earn the space it takes up.
Who Should Buy It?
- Remote workers who want to add 2,000–5,000 extra steps to sedentary days without leaving their desk
- Apartment dwellers with zero floor space for a full-size treadmill
- People recovering from minor knee or joint issues who want low-impact cardio in a controlled environment
- Anyone whose fitness goal is movement consistency rather than high-intensity training
Skip this if you're looking for a running treadmill, need speeds above 5.0 MPH, or want a seamless APP experience with social features and detailed analytics. This walking treadmill is a movement tool, not a training system.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If the Gkyet's top speed feels limiting, the UREVO WalkingPad P1 offers a slightly higher max speed and a foldable design — though it lacks the incline feature and tends to run louder. For users prioritising APP integration and workout programs, the RHYTHM FUN WalkingPad has a more polished app experience but commands a higher price. Both are valid alternatives depending on whether you value incline training or app quality more.
FAQ
It supports users up to 265 lbs, which is competitive for a compact under-desk model.
Final Verdict
The Gkyet walking treadmill with incline isn't trying to replace your gym — it's trying to save you from yourself. Most home fitness equipment fails not because it's bad, but because it's inconvenient to access. By fitting under a desk and staying there, this walking pad removes the friction that kills daily habits. The 5% incline is a genuine bonus rather than a marketing bullet; the quiet motor makes daily use realistic in shared living spaces; and at its price point it undercuts full-size treadmills while doing a different job more honestly. If you're serious about adding daily movement to a busy life, this is worth the counter-space.